So ya wannna be an intellectual…

A place for ideas from which history shall be made.


Happiness Just Might Be a Warm Cup of Coffee

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

Rocky Raccoon may have been satisfied reading that book placed by the Gideons in his hotel room, but I have something better for your reading list.  I read this book  a while back and am just now reminded to say something about it with all this hubbub about Starbucks and guns.

The book (by John R. Lott, Jr.) is called More Guns Less Crime (Understanding Crime and Gun Control Laws).  It is the most comprehensive analysis of crime statistics I have ever seen.

The gist of his argument is that when a certain kind of liberal concealed carry law is implemented there will be an associated reduction in the rates of violent crimes (both locally and in neighboring areas).  The statistics seem to uphold this theory and provide especial insight into the relationships between these same laws and the protections afforded to women and minorities.

I think folks on either side of this issue (as well as anyone on the fence) will benefit from reading this book.  I make no bones: he is writing (even if from the compulsion of reason) in support of the laws he finds protect us best.  Whether you are swayed by the power of reason is up to you, but you will find much within the pages to respect.

Of course the Starbucks issue is really a non-issue.  It is both opposing groups attempting to get a corporation to sponsor their petty debate.  This is not an issue for a corporate board room decision.  This is an issue for legislation.

I think we have great legislation in Washington state (very much in line with what Lott suggests provides the safest social sphere), so I’m not going to get all up in arms (what?) if cowboys start spinning their spurs while waiting on their capuccini.

I’d rather see Starbucks fix their grammar in whatever language they are under the impression they use.

Lock and load, baby-doll.

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Ce n’est pas ma faute

Monday, March 1st, 2010

I am not a magical mind.  I am not a unique and beautiful snowflake.  I’m just another drone.  And I had the same drone thought that all you other drones had.  “You named your new gizmo after a feminine hygiene product?”

I remember running through a list of possible iObject names while I was thinking about the upcoming announcement from Apple.  I must admit that iPad never crossed my mind.  We have to at least credit them for being original in this sense.

Regardless, this is the iDevice naming scheme jumping the shark.  They cannot continue with this naming scheme after this clear if bazaar foible.  Any new product following that naming scheme will be subject to “oh, it’s from those iPad people”.  Impressive.

I can’t even be bothered to post a link to a clever response.  There are just too many excellent responses.

Hang tough, you crazy caterpillars.

Time Wastes Us

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Storing Errors in the Brain and Creative Sparks

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

It occurs to me that there could be a connection between those mistakes we make, which we store as truths for even small fractions of time, and the later ability to create or innovate.  As I can at this time conceive of no scientific proof by which this speculation may be either confirmed or denied, it must remain solidly in the realm of philosophy.  First I will outline what I mean and then I will look at the possible consequences should this be true.

The brain stores memories, experiences, and the like as synaptical connections within its neural networks.  Some of these stores data points we can think of as true and others false.  Consider a child who encounters a small furry four-legged animal.  They may, adorably, call that animal a dog.  This experience will become part of their neural matrix relating to dogs and fur and animals &c—complete with many storage points, interrelations, and connections.  When later that child discovers this animal was and is in fact a badger, adjustments will be made across the matrix to allow the child to correctly distinguish between the true dog and the true badger.  However, what is important here is the false badger.

For the duration in which the badger was falsely identified as a dog, pathways were formed and connections were created all of which can be called upon later.  Clearly the person in question will not want to falsely identify the badger as a dog, but these pathways and connections provide alternative routes of thinking along which new ideas and innovations might be prospected.

Consider next that any brain, young or old, will contain thousands upon thousands of these false truths.  They may have been briefly held or long-standing, what matters is that what is false was thought true.  This branching allows for later branching.  It seems to me that this later branching can assist in the creative and innovative processes—branching into new ideas heretofore unthought.

I do not claim that this is the only nor the necessary cause of the creative spark, merely that it can be considered as a partner in the innovative process.

If this is the case, then we might surmise that any brain which was not capable of allowing for false truths of some minimal duration would also be in capable of exploiting those alternate pathways for creation and innovation.  Clearly this would have an impact in the field of Artificial Intelligence.  Such an artificial brain must be able to store indefinitely and use at least occasionally information which is incorrect.

My understanding of the current breed of AI decision making networks is that they are able to learn by adjusting weights over time.  These weights do not store the incorrect pathways; rather, they replace them.  This may well yield positive results in creating brain-like computing devices; however, it may be necessary to allow these artificial brains to maintain databases of false truths, mistakes, and incorrect impulses if we are to see them create and innovate.

This is speculative and probably highly condemnable by stronger philosophers than myself, but here it is anyway, out in the theater of ideas ripe for your consideration.

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The Power of Misinformation

Friday, October 23rd, 2009

Nobody wants to kill their own children.  I mean, that may seem like a good solution at tantrum time, but all kidding aside parents for the most part really want to see their children survive them.

However, the desire to feel good about protecting your children can lead down a path where feelings outweigh reasoned arguments.  Thanks to my friend Eric for sending me this great article on one facet of the crisis in this country concerning the irrational, wish-dream advocates attack on all intellectual and rational pursuits.

This article at Wired (“An Epidemic of Fear: How Panicked Parents Skipping Shots Endangers Us All”) does a good job of summing up the current information about immunization and the alarming trend to ignore the body of science supporting it.  Definitely a good read.

What is interesting to me (and to a number of friends with whom I have discussed it) is this willful embrace of ignorance.  It’s not just present here in this immunization issue.  Anytime truth comes into conflict with emotion there will arise a faction who cling to untruth for the sake of the heart-strings.

While I am certainly capable of sympathy with those many positions which feeling leads us towards, an important part of growing up is recognizing that the world is rarely as we wish it.

It’s time to grow up, everybody.

Though it is likely true what this article posits in its final paragraph: “There will always be more illogic and confusion than science can fend off.”  Nonetheless, we can and should raise our rational voices against the gale of emotive blabbering.

It is no longer enough to rest assured that the truth will prevail in time.  Yes, the Catholic Church did finally pardon Galileo.  But he died blind and separated from his daughters under house arrest in Rome.

Raise up your rational voices.

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Light Reading and a Seminal Seminar

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

I am currently reading a book by Lee Smolin called The Trouble With Physics: The Rise of String Theory, The Fall of a Science, and What Comes Next.  I am nearly done with it and feel confident in recommending it to anyone with an interest in the problems presently facing theoretical physicists or anyone with a more general interest in the philosophy of science.

He raises a number of intriguing questions concerning what qualifies as a theory and about theory acceptance.  Additionally he delves into what it means to do science and specifically how certain current theoretical avenues are threatening to impinge on the claims to truth that science as traditionally held.  All of this is accomplished within a framework of a host of interrelated concepts, conjectures, and theoretical candidates now under scrutiny in physics, especially particle physics.

I found the reading material quite accessible and would guess that most readers who have come this far through my review would be able to manage the concepts under discussion.  Having a backgroud in physics (even having taken a class in college) would be useful in terms of managing the vocabulary, but again I don’t think this is required to get through and to enjoy the material presented.

On a related note, he includes a citation for a seminar which took place in Canada’s Perimiter Institute a few years back.  Happily there are audio recordings of this seminar available through their site (the audio page is here).  Again, excellent brain yum-yums for the philosophical minded.  The seminar concerns whether the physical laws are fixed or whether they might change over time (so, has the gravitational constant been constant always?).

In short, read the book; listen to the seminar recordings; think and talk like a philosopher of science (so I don’t feel so awkward at parties).

Happy hunting.

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Spastic Plastic

Wednesday, June 17th, 2009

It is not news to anyone that we live in a disposable society.  But this wonderful lecture from TED contributor Capt. Charles Moore tells of the consequences of all this disposing (Seas of Plastic):

Ah, shit. Is it too late for that blue pill?

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Careful with that Bacon, Eugene!

Tuesday, May 5th, 2009

My friend Eric sent me this article on cutting steel with bacon. Read all about it over at BoingBoing.

The trick is to use high quality bacon.

Here is the video from YouTube:

I’m glad to discover I am part of a wide community of mad scientists.

Take that, 9-11 conspiracy theorists.

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Is Your World a Touch-Screen?

Thursday, March 26th, 2009

Walk with me into the pages of science fiction.  There has been a new device/system unveiled at TED which allows some pretty advanced and fantastical interactions between a person, the world around them, and the data bank we know and love as the Internet.

Really, you have to see this video (flash required).

Thanks to my friend Keith for bringing this to my attention.

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The Fungus Stinks On and Aquires an Algal Friend

Wednesday, March 18th, 2009

You may have heard about the fungus which produces diesel.  (I wrote about it here.)  Well, I found some more interesting and related articles which I felt others might like to read about.

The discover is being praised highly by the New Scientist and they seem to endorse it as a revolutionary breakthrough.  (So rarely are revolutions seen for what they are when they are, you shouldn’t take this as proof-positive.)

On a related note, I found an article over at Portfolio which discusses an algae which can be harvested as a bio-fuel—if all goes according to plan.

No matter how you slice it, this is an exciting time for energy production.  I can’t wait to see what the future holds.  Will we really use funghi and algae to energize our houses and cars?

Maybe it’s time to rethink the American farm?

Happy hunting, you crazy rabbits.

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Beach Whales for Breeding?

Wednesday, March 18th, 2009

I came upon this interesting article which talks about the ancestry of whales being land-breeders.  This is to say that whales may have once came up onto the land as a part of their breeding cycle (such as sea turtles do, for instance).

You can read the article here.

It got me to wondering if this might go some distance towards explaining why whales sometimes beach themselves.  The usual explanation I have heard is “humans suck”.  Essentially, we humans make so much noise in the oceans (and we certainly do) that the whales get confused and run aground.  This has never really satisfied me.

So, perhaps the whales are responding to a residual instinctual call to visit the land.  I suppose this could be tested against whale beachings as they relate to cyclical events in whale breeding seasons.

The New Scientist article to which I link above does talk about whales returning to land to give birth, but I’m really just speculating so don’t throw a shoe at me.

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